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Lucy Boynton on dating Freddie

The actress plays Mary Austin, the Queen singer’s one-time fiancee in the biopic ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’

- By Jane Mulkerrins

After production ended on Lucy Boynton’s latest film, Bohemian Rhapsody, the 24-yearold British actress was surprised to find herself dating Freddie Mercury.

The film begins in 1970 when Farrokh Bulsara, a Zoroastria­n Indian immigrant (played by Rami Malek), is working as a baggage handler at Heathrow Airport. By the final scene, set 15 years later, he has become Queen’s lead singer, performing a Live Aid set watched by a packed Wembley Stadium and a TV audience of 1.9 billion. When filming wrapped in February, Boynton and Malek started seeing each other.

After watching the film, it’s impossible to imagine anyone but Malek as Mercury, who died of Aids-related pneumonia in 1991 at the age of 45; the 37-year-old American actor disappears entirely into the role.

“He became

Freddie so closely that I assumed many of those idiosyncra­sies must be his own,” says Boynton. “Then we started hanging out, and I realised that he could not be more different. Having got to know him better, and then gone back to watch the film, I just think... how?”

In Bohemian Rhapsody, Boynton plays Mary Austin, Mercury’s one-time fiancee, who remained his closest friend and muse long after their romance had dwindled and he was living out his true sexuality. The relationsh­ip between the two characters is the emotional heart of a film that has had a far from straightfo­rward journey to the screen.

Talk of a Mercury biopic first began in 2008, to be scripted by The Crown’s

Peter Morgan and produced by two of the surviving members of Queen, May and the drummer Roger Taylor. Two years later, Sacha Baron Cohen was said to have been cast as Mercury. But in 2013, he quit, amid reports that he wanted the film to be a “gritty, R-rated tell-all centred around the gifted, gay singer”, while May and Taylor were intent on a more respectful narrative.

In 2015, Anthony McCarten was hired to rewrite the script and the following year Bryan Singer signed on to direct. Finally, last year, with Malek installed as the lead, filming began. Yet, even once the shoot was under way, the problems were not over. Last December, Singer was fired for “unprofessi­onal conduct”, and after a six-week break in filming, Dexter Fletcher was called in to finish the job.

When I meet Boynton, she gently deflects my questions about her relationsh­ip with Malek — “I’ll keep you posted” she quips — but reveals that her co-star has retained a few of Mercury’s mannerisms. “You get a gesture here and there sometimes — it’s thrilling,” she says.

Boynton was born in New York — where her British journalist parents, Graham Boynton (The Daily Telegraph’s former travel editor) and Adriaane Pielou, were working — and lived there until they moved to London when she was five.

With no profession­al experience, she scored her first role aged 11, as the young Beatrix Potter in Miss Potter, alongside Renee Zellweger. Then, she played Posy Fossil in the adaptation of Noel Streatfeil­d’s Ballet Shoes, and Margaret Dashwood in Of Sense and Sensibilit­y. She has since negotiated the transition from child to adult roles, starring last year in Murder

on the Orient Express.

Landing the role of Mary Austin in Bohemian Rhapsody gave her pause before signing on, not least because the real-life Austin declined to be involved. “It must be a very odd thing, having strangers tell the story of someone you knew better than anyone,” says Boynton. “I would really just like to calm those nerves. I have a letter that I have written to her, which I will send if there does come a time at which I am allowed to contact her.”

I ask Boynton if she thinks Austin always believed Mercury to be gay, even while they were together. “I don’t know,” she says. “I do believe that Freddie and Mary were very evolved — they just completely accepted one another. He referred to her as his common-law wife. Mary allowed him the confidence and the courage to be exactly who he knew he could be. They were both quite shy people but they would just bring out this light in each other.”

 ?? Photos by Rex Features ?? Rami Malek and Lucy Boynton in ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’.
Photos by Rex Features Rami Malek and Lucy Boynton in ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’.

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